5/17/2026 at 5:52:18 PM
As a European I want mistral and EU to do well. But at the same time, I wouldn’t actually give up my well paid engineering job outside of EU to even entertain working for them in EU. Too low salaries and too high taxes.by Insanity
5/17/2026 at 8:32:52 PM
This is a pervasive misconception in the industry, and a very dull trope on HN. Your income tax makes it possible to create a livable society in the EU. You get much more free time and are protected from a lot of random life events, even if you work in a McDonalds counter and not as a software engineer. You have rent, healthcare, protection from landlords. Not perfect, but at least the direction is there.Solely profit-optimizing free market thinking destroys society and the planet.
by poisonborz
5/18/2026 at 12:17:02 AM
Plus, even if you do prefer the American way (and I could see why), it seems fanatic for people to not recognize the clear benefits of the European model.by marcuschong
5/17/2026 at 11:34:42 PM
[flagged]by 627467
5/17/2026 at 6:07:54 PM
How do you divorce being a European principally from being willing to pay taxes? What part of being uniquely European do you value that does not fundamentally require taxes?by jstummbillig
5/17/2026 at 6:30:53 PM
The problem with taxes in Europe are that the ultra-wealthy don't pay them. That burden is particularly focused on those who are high wage earners. If I look at my own country, as a high earner I'm paying close to a 50% effective tax rate (a little less with mortgage interest deductions). However the billionaire families who own the beer brewers, shipping companies and agraculture companies are paying well under 0.5% effective. They pay less than in the US. Due to this reason we're one of the most infamous tax dodge countries in Europe, apparently the Swedish and German billionaires have tax residency to avoid paying it.by radicalbyte
5/18/2026 at 1:35:05 AM
Effective tax rates for European ultra rich seem to be ~50x that from my googling. Is there a source for the “well under 0.5% effective”?Perhaps you’re thinking of wealth taxes rather than effective tax rates? https://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/effectivetaxrate.asp
by no-name-here
5/18/2026 at 4:32:53 AM
He is, the rich pay normal tax and in Sweden (~52-55% effective), includes extra tax on high income. Even dividend tax is 30%by tmikaeld
5/17/2026 at 7:39:50 PM
Not every EU country has a high tax burden. Rates are generally much fairer in Eastern Europe and the Baltics.So I wouldn’t say high taxes are fundamentally European.
by danielfoster
5/17/2026 at 6:16:39 PM
So just because someone is born in Europe they should automatically believe that the taxation system is flawless and salaries sufficient?by trinix912
5/17/2026 at 6:22:58 PM
Noby jstummbillig
5/17/2026 at 6:27:06 PM
No but to come to Europa, you get less differences in wealth (essentially) universal healthcare at low/reasonable cost (ie, I can get cancer and not feel it financially), and a lot of state support when you're out of a job. Etc. Thos things cost tax money.by teekert
5/17/2026 at 6:35:52 PM
>you get less differences in wealthYes so if you were in the higher percentiles of wealth, like many engineers in the US, you'd end up with less wealth in Europe, while if you were in the lower percentiles then in Europe you'd end up with more wealth. That's how redistribution works, the top 10% of income earners end up with less (even after accounting for healthcare and education; they get back less then they put in), and US software engineers are in the top 10% of income earners.
by logicchains
5/17/2026 at 8:22:29 PM
Getting less benefit than a lower bracket isn't the same as getting less than you put in and conflating them is misleading or, if intentional, deceitful.by collingreen
5/17/2026 at 7:07:38 PM
Could these software engineers be bankrupt if they are hit by a serious illness? Say progressive MS or a cancer, which will require extensive sick days? It is there protection?(this is an actual question, not an ironic one)
by BrandoElFollito
5/18/2026 at 5:54:52 AM
The exact outcome depends on the country's specific laws, but generally speaking, there is protection.In the Netherlands you get up two years paid sick leave, before your employer can fire you. If you are sick enough to not be able to work again, you'll get 75% of your last earned wage from the government.
The tricky situation is when you are considered partially unable to work. You'll get time to find a suitable job, but your benefits drop over time. Finding a job in that situation is sometimes very difficult. It's possible to fall between the cracks.
In any case, the intent is to make sure people do not get unfairly hurt by life events outside their control.
by jochem9
5/17/2026 at 10:53:25 PM
She's not a software engineer, just married to one and worked for software companies, and maybe I don't remember correctly, but she described a bit of her experience with the American system [1]:> I should have taken medical leave at the first surgery, but my manager was confused about our status – the acquisition was so recent that I didn’t have six months as an Oracle employee, and she said, “You’re not eligible to take paid leave.”
> I couldn’t afford to take unpaid leave, and I was afraid I would lose my job and my health insurance, so I had to power on and pretend I was okay while I was really sick and taking an antibiotic that had horrible side effects.
> ...
by ciupicri
5/17/2026 at 6:18:20 PM
I have to say, I visited Zurich once, and everything was clean, organized, civilized, and pretty. Friends told me taxes are high but you get great education, great healthcare, decent disposable income, and good transportation. If you get laid off, the state continues paying your previous salary for one (two?) years.If everything is taken care of me from taxes, why do I need money? Take it all.
by stavros
5/17/2026 at 6:42:53 PM
Switzerland is the closest you can get to USA without leaving Europe. Taxes in Zurich are lower than in the Bay Area, at will employment, healthcare that is primarily funded by flat fees rather than income tax, etc. Even the constitution was originally inspired by the American one.by gizmondo
5/17/2026 at 6:27:35 PM
FWIW Zurich feels like that to me too, and I'm from the Netherlands :)by teekert
5/17/2026 at 6:28:03 PM
Well, Zurich is everything but representative of Europe. Switzerland has much lower taxes and higher salaries than the rest of Europe.by amunozo
5/18/2026 at 4:17:19 AM
Switzerland has about the same taxes as most of Europe, but the taxes are spread between federal, cantonal, and municipal taxes. The combined marginal rate in Switzerland can reach 45%.Switzerland also has a wealth tax.
TLDR: Switzerland is not the low-tax fantasy wonderland many people believe it to be.
by gamblor956
5/17/2026 at 7:02:13 PM
Yeah, as an American, I think the thing that breaks the American brain is that you can have taxes that don’t just line the pockets of billionaires—that you can pay taxes and get high quality services as a result. There are so many conservative and libertarian Americans who think that taxes are necessarily squandered while they simultaneously elect politicians who insist on squandering taxes so they can prove that taxes will be squandered.by throwaway894345
5/17/2026 at 6:19:05 PM
Not OP but to respond to your question, like everything, there is a scale to this question. Would you give to the state 30% of your income to pay for public services? Most people would say yes.What about 40%? 50%?
Most people agree that taxes need to be paid for the common good of society. However, many people disagree about the correct amount and increasingly about the usage of said taxes.
That is the real problem in my opinion.
by rdm_blackhole
5/17/2026 at 6:46:43 PM
> Would you give to the state 30% of your income to pay for public services? Most people would say yes. What about 40%? 50%?I pay about 6% for public services, around 8% for health insurance, and around 25% for the public pension insurance. The issue isn't taxes, it's almost entirely demographics.
by kuschku
5/17/2026 at 5:55:52 PM
I wonder why googles biggest European office is in the low tax high salary country of Switzerlandby scirob
5/17/2026 at 6:03:27 PM
That's the biggest engineering office, but not the biggest overall European Google office, right? That would be in low tax low salary Ireland.by hobofan
5/17/2026 at 6:02:15 PM
Zurich is third behind Dublin (definitely for tax reasons) and London.by basicoperation
5/18/2026 at 5:20:12 AM
Move to Luxembourg then.by verzali
5/17/2026 at 6:20:27 PM
But working in UE gives you much stronger job protection.So, in a way, you get what you pay for.
by tlogan
5/17/2026 at 6:46:04 PM
But that is a the problem though. You get stronger job protection because its very hard to find a job. If you could find a new job quickly and if the job market was more fluid, you would only rarely need this sort of job protection.by rdm_blackhole
5/18/2026 at 5:23:47 AM
I have never struggled to find a new job quickly in Europe.by verzali
5/17/2026 at 8:26:46 PM
Compared to what I have heard about the US, I'd say it is actually easier to find jobs in (at least Western) Europe. Plenty of jobs, and a way easier interview process. Not 8 rounds of interviews and months of waiting (that I've heard of). But maybe two rounds in the same week and start the next month (if you want).by fatuna
5/17/2026 at 7:43:26 PM
This is a fair point to be honest. But I about 4x’d my take-home salary and get to work on more cutting edge tech, with more impact than in EU.I did work on some cool medical device and ML tech back in EU, associated with a university and later a start up. But regulation became a PITA.
by Insanity
5/17/2026 at 6:24:14 PM
I would become a patriotic European too, but only after our leaders at the national and EU level stop being transatlanticist sellouts... which won't happen any time soon.by giacomoforte
5/17/2026 at 8:24:58 PM
What's a "transatlanticist sellout"?by collingreen
5/17/2026 at 6:37:53 PM
you get much more for your taxes than in the US thoughby insane_dreamer
5/17/2026 at 7:44:31 PM
True, I agree. But it does suck working in tech on a “medium” salary when your overseas colleagues do the same work and earn much more.What I probably miss the most about EU (apart from family) is good food.
by Insanity
5/18/2026 at 5:33:06 AM
earning more is relative to your COLby insane_dreamer